yet again .......WhiteBlue wrote: .......There is an official figure of a 35% fuel reduction in 2013 which is supposed to be achieved by the engine and a more efficient chassis with reduced drag. We have discussed the efficiency of the old engines and most people place them at 29-30%.
Based on those figures the fuel reduction would translate into a 12-13% improvement of the efficiency. Based on that thinking I would expect the engines to have an efficiency of 42% which isn't all bad for a reciprocating mobile power unit.donskar wrote: .....If someone in power really wanted to be "green" and economical, the FIA would impose a series of "stepped" fuel restrictions -- for example, 5% less fuel in 2013, another 5% less in 2014, etc. That would achive the PR goal ....
all N/A F1 etc engines (and 99+% of forced induction ones) used over-rich mixtures for maximum power regardless of the ineffiency
any mixture richer then neutral/stoichiometric simply throws fuel away unburnt
any such engine would be significantly more efficient by using a neutral mixture (though slightly less powerful of course)
originally GPs were limited to 9.4 miles/(UK) gallon, but the rules have not since 1913 required fuel efficiency
....... so the FIA was biased in setting the target that it did, without letting the N/A engine to be efficiency-optimised
we know that the Wright 'Turbo-Compound' engine that powered the last half-generation of piston-engined airliners .....
gained from its compounding 18% 'free' takeoff power, but only gained 6% at best efficiency (cruise) power
the real gain from 2014 F1 technology will be much less (then the FIA headline) at partial and low powers, ie in road cars
and should be corrected to a degree of downsizing beyong the level of 'turbo downsizing'
the practical effect will be to sell hybrids to people who wouldn't without the F1 buzz ever buy a hybrid
80 years ago the most efficient SI engines (aircraft engines) were those lightly boosted by a centrifugal supercharger/compressor
(costing 2% of crankshaft power (1% net ??) , but 'upsizing' the power of the engine by 20% without increasing friction etc losses)
this was useless for cars, because the compressor delivery is highly sensitive to its rpm
2014 has ingeniously solved this problem by electrically driving it at crucial times, ie crucial for the road car buyer
(F1 rules prevent eg compressor drive by the near-ideal, an electrically modulated differential-input planetary geartrain)